Guest guest Posted April 16, 2004 Report Share Posted April 16, 2004 I heard a story on NPR (National Public Radio) about Kansas City. They're building a fancy new public library downtown and trying to create a " safe zone " around it. The purpose is to attract the " right kind " of people back to the downtown area. Housing to accommodate those people is being fixed up within that " safe zone. " " Safe, " in this case, means that the area will exclude those whom the " right kind " of people do not wish to see. At first, the " wrong " behaviors are described according to minor crime: public urination, public drinking, minor drug sales, etc. The reason for describing the " behaviors " according to " crimes " is so they (the ones doing the excluding) won't be seen as targeting " the homeless " en mass. In theory, well-behaved homeless people would be able to use the library, too. Further on in the story, however, one official refers to " the mentally ill " who " can't control themselves " and may exhibit " behaviors " that " the right kind of people " don't want to have to see. Users of the library, or of the sidewalks in the " safe zone, " will have to be able to maintain an appearance of " normality, " it seems, or risk being deported back to the " unsafe zone. " I suspect would risk exile if he were so bold as to sit and rock (if he were so " inconvenient " as to sit and be himself) in the new Kansas City library. :-( Jane Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 16, 2004 Report Share Posted April 16, 2004 Jane Meyerding wrote: > I suspect would risk exile if he were so bold as to sit and > rock (if he were so " inconvenient " as to sit and be himself) in the > new Kansas City library. :-( If I lived there, I would go right there and be as " myself " as possible. I don't just rock-- I flap too. The ADA prohibits things like this. Those idiots want to associate being unusual with public urination and drug sales... that's a bunch of nonsense, of course. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 17, 2004 Report Share Posted April 17, 2004 > If I lived there, I would go right there and be as " myself " as > possible. I don't just rock-- I flap too. Yes, I wish more of us lived near there so we could have a big " autistic day " in the " safe zone " . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 17, 2004 Report Share Posted April 17, 2004 > Further on in the story, however, one official refers to > " the mentally ill " who " can't control themselves " and may > exhibit " behaviors " that " the right kind of people " don't > want to have to see. Users of the library, or of the > sidewalks in the " safe zone, " will have to be able to > maintain an appearance of " normality, " it seems, or risk > being deported back to the " unsafe zone. " I believe the official was a homeless advocate (or possibly homeless himself?) who was saying, basically, " Some people urinate in public and whatever other crimes because they can't control themselves, not because they are doing it intentionally - and they shouldn't be banned from the library. " (paraphrased obviously) I don't think it was one of the law's supporters, but instead the person making that statement was one of the law's opponents. That said, I do think the law is bad. If someone is breaking society's laws in a way which needs separation from society, there are ways we already have to do that (and they are bad enough). If they aren't breaking laws bad enough to separate them from society, then we shouldn't separate them from society. I don't like laws like this at all, and suspect some of us are looked at as the kind of people they don't want to see in public. But they were mostly targeting actual crime, not " weird behavior " , and I don't think most of us make a habit out of breaking laws - I think the reason to oppose this law is less that it affects us directly then it is just a bad law. If a library is a place of learning (not just free internet access! <grin>), you would expect people to be welcomed... And for some of the crime (public urination specifically), one obvious solution is to provide public toilets. Most cities have a serious lack of public toilets, and if you have to spend all day in a downtown area where you aren't wanted in stores and such, where do you pee? As for the other crimes, there may be similar " obvious " solutions which deal with the problem not the symptom. But most laws that affect homeless are " Get them out of sight " laws, not " fix the real problem. " (A great example of this is a fairly recent Denver law which prohibits sleeping in city parks - it caused the homeless to have to sleep in hidden places rather then in the safer large groups many of them slept in; A year later, a half dozen homeless men were found brutally murdered - personally, I find these events to be connected.) -- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.